Goldfine v. Sutton

40 Pa. D. & C. 68, 1940 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 26
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedDecember 10, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 40 Pa. D. & C. 68 (Goldfine v. Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldfine v. Sutton, 40 Pa. D. & C. 68, 1940 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 26 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1940).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.,

Petitioner Charles Goldfine owns and operates the Alden Theatre, at Mid-vale and Crescent Avenues, Philadelphia.

Petitioner David S. Moliver owns and operates the Viola Theatre, 2402 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia.

At the Alden Theatre, Charles Goldfine conducted a “Cash Quiz” game. Upon entering the theatre, each patron is presented with a circular card, bearing 13 detachable numbered tabs, and a detachable stub. The card and stub are serially numbered. During the program a film is shown on the screen presenting 13 questions in sequence. Each numbered tab is used to answer the same numbered question, propounded from the screen. If the answer is “right” the tab is left on. If the answer is “wrong” the tab is torn off. The cards are identical, except as to serial numbers, and all the patrons participate. Upon the conclusion of the quiz, the numbered stub is detached and retained by the patron, and the card is deposited in a receptacle. Petitioner decides the correct answers, and the numbers of the cards answered correctly are announced on the same night the following week, when prizes are awarded, in equal amounts, to each winner.

On November 19,1940, respondent confiscated the film and cards as an illegal lottery.

At the Viola Theatre, David S. Moliver conducted a “Zing-o” game. Upon entering the theatre each patron is presented with a double or duplicate “Zing-o” card, perforated in the centre, and serially numbered for identification only. All the cards are identical, except for the serial number. Each card has 36 spaces, on which are [70]*70printed black and white drawings, each of which represents a sound or noise. During the program, petitioner announces from the stage that a playlet, reproduced over the sound system by means of electrical transcription, will be shown, sounds and noises will be heard, which may or may not appear on the card. When the participant properly identifies the sound or noise a tab is pushed in the space which represents it, on both sides of the double card. Persons identifying all sounds and noises correctly receive awards. Punching the wrong tab disqualifies the participant from the contest. Punched spaces need not be in a straight line, or in any particular order. When the playlet is concluded, the cards are separated on the perforated line by the participant, one card is given to an usher, and the duplicate is retained by the patron. Petitioner then announces the correct sounds and noises, and awards the same prize to each and every patron identifying all sounds and noises correctly.

On November 12,1940, respondent confiscated the electrical transcription and the “Zing-o” cards, as an illegal lottery.

The petitions seek the return of the film and cards, and the electrical transcription and cards.

A lottery incorporates three concurrent elements, viz:

1. A prize or thing of value profferred;

2. To one or more recipients among those participating, who are to be determined through chance or caprice;

3. A consideration having been exacted and/or received for the privilege of participation.

The elements of a consideration and a prize are admittedly present in both cases, and the question for our solution is whether the prizes are determined through chance or skill.

There can be no lottery without the element of uncertainty or chance. The universal acceptation of a game of chance is such a game as is determined entirely or in part by lot or mere luck, and in which judgment, practice, skill, or adroitness are thwarted by chance. Thus, a dice game, [71]*71determined by throwing the dice, is a game of chance. In a game of skill nothing is left to chance, but superior knowledge and attention, or superior strength, agility, or practice, gain the victory. Thus, chess, billiards, and bowling are examples of games of skill.. The prize is given, not by chance or lot, but as a reward for the skill of the participants. The result is influenced by the personal effort of the contestant and the means of attaining the result are known. So long as the distribution of prizes depends on skill, purposely exercised by the participants, there is no lottery. It was games of chance that the legislature sought to prohibit by the enactment of section 601 of The Penal Code of June 24, 1939, P. L. 872. This is a penal statute and must be strictly construed, and we find in it no attempt to forbid games of skill.

As a commercial stimulant, quizzes and games of chance and skill presently afford a popular advertising program for the radio sponsor, moving picture theatre, chain grocery, the newspaper, and other commercial enterprises having immediate contact with the public. What many of these contests signify is not a chance to win because of skill, superior knowledge, or conscientious effort, but an opportunity to try one’s luck. But since they exact no consideration for the privilege of participation, they are exempt from the taint of illegality.

The games heretofore conducted in the Philadelphia moving picture theatres, which were suppressed as within the social policy of the lottery statute, were games in which the recipients of the prizes were determined through chance.

In Somerson v. Wilson et al., C. P. No. 1, March term, 1937, no. 350, McDevitt, P. J., held the game of “Lucky” illegal.

In Commonwealth v. Superintendent of County Prison, Quarter Sessions 1938, Flood, J., held the game of “Quiz-o” a lottery, where the cards of participants differed in that there were a hundred questions with but 24 spaces on each card; if five easy questions were asked [72]*72in order at the beginning of the game, and the answers to those five questions were on the line of the card of one of the participants, that patron would win before the others had any opportunity to exercise any skill.

In “Party” the faces of motion picture actors and actresses constituted the subject matter of the game. As the master of ceremonies called the names of the celebrities, the holder of the card punched the proper face. The master of ceremonies had a number of cards with names before him and the order in which they were called depended upon how they appeared in the pack which he held. The number of combinations and permutations was very great, since the game was operated with seventy-five or a hundred possible faces. The court held that the element of chance clearly predominated over any small element of so-called skill which might be involved. Judge Flood held the game a lottery, and stated there was nothing in these games to compare with the skill necessary to make the various moves in the checker games, referred to in D’Orio v. Startup Candy Co., 71 Utah 410, 266 Pac. 1037, D’Orio v. Jacobs, 151 Wash. 297, 275 Pac. 563, and Boatwright v. The State, 118 Tex. Crim. 381, 38 S. W. (2d) 87, where every participant had an opportunity to play out the game and win, just as he had in Hoff v. Daily Graphic, Inc., 132 N. Y. Misc. 597, and where he was not shut out because some chance let another person win before his game was fully played.

In Commonwealth v. Superintendent of Philadelphia County Prison, Quarter Sessions Court, October term, 1939, the game of “Query-Quiz” was held a lottery. Each patron, upon entering the theatre, was presented with a card which was marked with a serial number on the top and bottom and stamped with the letters “Q-Q”. The top portion of the card was torn off and deposited in a receptacle and the lower portion was retained by the patron.

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Related

Boatwright v. State
38 S.W.2d 87 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1931)
D'Orio v. Startup Candy Co.
266 P. 1037 (Utah Supreme Court, 1928)
D'Orio v. Jacobs
275 P. 563 (Washington Supreme Court, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Pa. D. & C. 68, 1940 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldfine-v-sutton-paqtrsessphilad-1940.